mm" Wednesday September 24, 2003 www.michigandaily.com sports@michigandaily.com PORTS 8 to Recommitted Vozza earns top spot for Blue Big House needs big crowd, despite loss By Matt Kramer Daily Sports Writer Michigan men's golf coach Andrew Sapp didn't recruit Christian Vozza. But after this past weekend, Sapp is certainly glad he's got him on his team. Vozza, a sophomore who committed to the Wolverines during former coach Jim Carras' final year, started off the Wolverines' 2003 season in style this weekend, shooting rounds of 74-69-67- 210 to finish third individually in the Northern Intercollegiate at the Michigan Golf Course. He not only nearly beat the entire field of 75 golfers, but he did so playing as an individual, which meant his scores didn't go toward helping the Wolverines out of their 12th-place finish. Vozza's qualifying rounds in practice prior to the weekend were not low enough to make the tourna- ment team, but after this weekend's performance, he won't be playing as an individual for much longer. "I was pretty much in the zone," Vozza said. "Everything was just consistent. In the last round, I hit 16 greens and birdied three of the last four holes. I've never been that consistent." Sapp couldn't have been happier for one of his golfers. "I was more than pleasantly surprised with the way Christian played this weekend," Sapp said. "He worked hard all winter long on his conditioning, and I really challenged him to perform. Now I'm glad to see he's getting what he worked for." When Vozza came to Ann Arbor last fall, he did- n't expect it would take him more than a year to make an impact. Coming out of Grand Rapids Baptist High School, Vozza was a first-team all-state selection three times and was a member of the 2000 state championship team. He was recruited by the likes of Notre Dame and Emory. Yet during his freshman season, Vozza played in just two events for the Wolverines and his scoring average was 75.16. "I didn't realize how hard it was to balance everything as a freshman," he said. "Playing a sport and going to school here is like having two full time jobs. Everything just suffered. I was disappointed." Vozza's game wasn't up to par, literally. "I didn't play as much as I hoped, only being in those two tournaments," he said. "But it's been my goal to get it back." Vozza recommitted his mindset, and his game during the summer. Now he's back. He played in the Western Amateur, one of the largest amateur tournaments in the country and almost qualified for this year's U.S. Amateur Cham- pionship. "I worked hard all summer because my game wasn't up to speed," Vozza said. For now, Vozza's got a spot in the starting five. In fact, he'll be playing No. 1 for the Wolverines in this weekend's tournament at Indiana. Vozza knows that he must maintain consistency to stick around, but if there's anyone ready to make his presence felt, it's Christian Vozza. BRETT MOUNTAIN/Daily With his stellar play last week, sophomore Christian Vozza has secured his place among the top five. CHRIS BURKE Goin' to Work Mary Pinter, LSA junior ... I hear you. Pinter's letter to the editor ran in yesterday's paper. The gist of the letter was that she was disgusted. Disgusted with the attitude that Michigan students and alumni are beginning to show in the face of Saturday's pass-the-Rolaids loss to Oregon. Pinter begged for the Maize and Blue faithful to rally together, once again pack the Big House and engulf Indiana in a raucous swarm of excitement. My guess? It's not going to happen. I've heard the rumblings, too. People 'round these parts just don't have much interest in Satur- day's game between Michigan and Indiana at the Big House. This is my fourth year here, and the same thing happens every time the Wolverines drop a ballgame. If Notre Dame, Penn State, Michi- gan State, or Ohio State travel to Ann Arbor, the Michigan Stadium crowd gets going. The place is packed (see NCAA-record crowd against the Irish), the students are loud and occasionally the alumni will even get into the act. But, inevitably, there are games like this weekend's. As of yesterday, Michigan was a 35-point favorite over the Hoosiers. There's about as much chance of Indiana hanging in this game as there was the Emmy broadcast last Sunday going an entire segment without a joke about the California gubernatorial race. And this type of game - be it Indiana, Houston, Central Michigan, etc. - is exactly the type of game that gives the Michigan Stadium crowd its bad name. I know that there hasn't been a crowd of less than 100,000 for a game in the Big House since 1975. I know that the crowd was a factor against Notre Dame. I know that when Ohio State comes calling in November, Ann Arbor will be jumping. I also know that none of that is good enough. The thing that stands Michigan crowds out as a "champagne sip- ping" group is a game like this one. If everything goes as expected, Michigan will be up by the end of the first quarter, the crowd will be near silent by the second and seats will start emptying out at halftime. That - and I think Mary Pinter agrees - is unacceptable. Look, no one's demanding that every single student go to every sin- gle game and stay for every single down. But it would be nice if people went to Michigan Stadium not to hang out, but to watch football, and they cheered, regardless of the opponent. If the alums and students here are serious about erasing the Big House's reputation of silence, then there's your mission. Go ahead, someone pinch me, wake me up. I'm dreaming. It'd be great to hear Michigan Sta- dium erupt all day Saturday. Chances are that it'll be closer to a three-hour awkward silence. I didn't get the opportunity to make the trip to Oregon last week, so I missed out on those festivities. But Michigan coach Lloyd Carr claims that it's the loudest stadium he's ever been in - and I'm pretty sure he's been in the Big House. I've been told by people who did make the trip that it was something you have to see to believe. I doubt we blew away the Houston fans (if there were any) when they came to Ann Arbor. The eventual goal has to be for announcers and coaches to talk about having to play in Michigan Stadium like they talk about having to play at Oregon, Ohio State or Ten- nessee. A good showing Saturday would be a nice start. See you there, Mary. - Chris Burke feels that just doing the wave is not enough this weekend ... or any weekend. He can be reached at chrisbur@umich.edu. 0 a Pac- O ffers opening week excitement By Matt Singer and Beth Adelson For the Daily As Michigan's horrifying loss to Ore- gon this past Satur- day proved, anything can and will happen in the world of col- lege football. With most Big 12 teams idle this week, the A R SOSt most interesting matchups come out of the Pac-10. No. 3 SOUTHERN CAL. (3-0) AT CAu- FORNIA (2-3) - 6:30 P.M., Fox SPORTS NET: So it's not exactly California vs. Stanford. But it's still an intrastate rival- ry between the third-ranked Trojans and their Golden State brethren. Southern Cal. is coming off a bye week, while the Golden Bears are still celebrating their thrilling 31-24, victory at Illinois. At quarterback for the Golden Bears is junior college transfer Aaron Rodgers, who made his first career start last week against the Fighting Illini. Rodgers will be looking to junior wide receiver Geoff MacArthur, who caught 10 passes for 155 yards and one touch- down last week. The California running game is also coming off a big week in which wrecking ball Adimchinobe Echemandu ran for 70 yards and a score. California's aggressive defense can wreak havoc on opposing quarter- backs. Just ask Illinois quarterback Jon Beutjer, who is still having nightmares about California linebacker Wendell Hunter's nine tackles and three sacks. Well-rested Southern Cal. showcased a high-octane offense in its Sept. 13 game against Hawaii. True freshman tailback tandem Reggie Bush and LenDale White combined for 112 yards and four touchdowns. Quarterback Matt Leinart was efficient, completing 15-of- 21 passes. Star wide receiver Mike Williams strikes fear into defenders and will showcase his incredible combina- tion of size and speed Saturday. The Trojans will march confidently into Memorial Stadium and steamroll the overmatched Golden Bears. Howev- er, don't underestimate the Echemandu factor, or the impact of California's swarming defense. Southern Cal. 45, California 17 No. 21 WASHINGTON STATE (3-1) AT No. 10 OREGON (4-0) - 3:30 P.M., ESPN: As Michigan fans are painfully aware, the 10th-ranked Oregon Ducks are coming off of one of the biggest wins in school history, a heart-stopping 31-27 victory over Michigan. Now the Ducks have a new target, in No. 21 Washington State. The Cougars, fresh off a 23-13 win over New Mexico, are hoping to end Oregon's hot streak. Hosting their second straight ranked team at the "Nut House," the Ducks are poised to continue their improbable suc- cess. The two-quarterback system employed by coach Mike Bellotti has worked wonders, and the Oregon run defense has been rock solid. Despite its lack of a superstar, Oregon's offensive unit has been efficient and has avoided mistakes. However, as Michigan proved in last week's second half, Oregon's major weakness lies in its pass defense. Washington State has fully recovered from its gut-wrenching opening-day loss to Notre Dame, dismantling Col- orado 47-26 last week. Washington State's offense focuses on the passing game, and expect quarterback Matt Kegel to exploit the Ducks' shaky pass defense. Junior Devard Darling is con- sidered among the most talented wide- outs in the country and is riding the high of a 113-yard performance against New Mexico. This should be a close game with offensive fireworks abound. But with the way things have been going for Ore- gon, expect the Ducks to pull out a late victory. In this Pac-10 battle, two quar- terbacks are better than one. Oregon 48, Washington State 42 44 ATTENTION BASKETBALL FANS: THE MAIZE RAGE IS HOLDING ITS FIRST MEETING OF THE SEASON TONIGHT AT 7 P.M. AT CLIFF KEEN ARENA. THIS REMINDER BROUGHT TO YOU BY YOUR FRIENDS AT DAILY SPORTS. TONY DING/Daily The Ducks are flying high after last weekend's upset of Michigan. Need Money? The Xi Educational Foundation has undergrad scholarships available now. For more info: www.xialumns.org/edu.htm 401 4 <, iW F33C ;y. ,k3,ii#1 I' E5" I. ... .::.. ': oiniara$ taxies __ ..,a . . kn. .a